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Hans De Keulenaer

TheStar.com - Business - Switching off incandescents a no-brainer? - 0 views

  • Compact fluorescent light bulbs are much more energy efficient than incandescent lighting. No arguments there. But is it wise to outright ban the old Edison light bulb in Ontario? Across Canada?A year ago this writer would have had one answer: Definitely. But the answer, it turns out, shouldn't be so clear cut.At least that's the conclusion of a recent paper by Michael Ivanco, a senior scientist at Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., and professor Bryan Karney (along with graduate student Kevin Waher) from the department of civil engineering at the University of Toronto.The three have authored a study called "To Switch or Not to Switch: A Critical Analysis of Canada's Ban on Incandescent Light Bulbs," and you may be surprised by the findings.
Glycon Garcia

ENN: Build "green" to cut emissions fast, report says - 0 views

  • "Green" construction could cut North America's climate-warming emissions faster and more cheaply than any other measure, environmental experts from Canada, Mexico and the United States reported on Thursday.
Sergio Ferreira

Why Edison-style light bulbs aren't always bad - 0 views

  • Are we releasing more greenhouse gas emissions by using more fossil-fuelled heating to make up for the heat that we're not getting from CFLs and LEDs?
  • But if you're in a state or province that uses more emission-free hydroelectric power and nuclear power, then it might make sense to keep on using that Edison-style bulb during the winter.
davidchapman

New Record: Wind Powers 40% Of Spain : MetaEfficient - 0 views

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    40% of Spain's demand met by wind during recent windy weekend. It would be interesting to know more - what was the demand, what percentage of available wind capacity was used, how variable was the wind, how was this variability managed, etc. Does anyone know anyone who knows?
Hans De Keulenaer

Technology Review: Making Electric Vehicles Practical - 0 views

  • A new approach to selling and recharging electric cars could overcome some of the basic issues that have kept them from being widely adopted. A startup called Project Better Place, which had the largest of any venture-funding round in 2007, raising $200 million, recently announced plans to install recharging infrastructure in Israel and Denmark and to sell electric cars using a business model much like that used today with cell phones.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Cost of Energy » Blog Archive » The revolution is in the second plug - 0 views

  • With all the talk recently of EV’s being tested in various countries and three models (Subaru R1e, Mitsubishi iMIEV, Nissan Denki Cube) potentially arriving in the US in just a few years, it’s worth revisiting once more the notion of how well such a product would be received here. My longtime position has been that if you make even minimally reasonable assumptions about the vehicles–they’re safe, they’re as efficient as one would expect a small, all-electric vehicle to be, they’re affordable, and they don’t have any weird “gotcha” details–they’ll find millions of happy owners.
Hans De Keulenaer

Railway Gazette: UltraCaps win out in energy storage - 0 views

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    REGENERATIVE BRAKING is widely practised, but there have to be other trains around to absorb the surplus power being fed back into the catenary or third rail. Processing the output from trains and pushing it back into the local grid is possible with an AC power supply, but very expensive with DC traction. Too often, power produced by traction motors in braking mode ends up heating resistor banks. The elegant alternative is to store the braking energy on the train. This not only avoids the electrical complications of regenerating through the traction power supply network. It reduces the rated power requirement of that network by lopping demand peaks during acceleration, saves energy by reducing losses in the catenary or conductor rail, and by limiting voltage drop it allows substations to be further apart. NiMH batteries have the necessary energy storage density in terms of kWh/kg, and are slightly more expensive, but their life in terms of charge/discharge cycles in no way matches the LRV requirement for 2million cycles over 10 years. Flywheels have been tried but never caught on for several reasons.
Glycon Garcia

Renewable energy law signed into effect in Chile | Markets | Reuters - 0 views

  • SANTIAGO, March 20 (Reuters) - Chilean President Michelle Bachelet signed a new energy law into effect on Thursday that requires electric utilities to invest in and supply nonconventional energy sources (NCES). The vanguard law is an attempt by the energy-poor country to diversify supply as it tries to feed booming industry, particularly its copper mining sector.
Sergio Ferreira

wattwatt - community for individuals interested in electrical energy efficiency - Cable... - 0 views

  • Nodal analysis or link analysis of the Harmonic prone Electrical supply installation, its important to know the values of impedances offered by power cables for different harmonics present
  • Most of Power Cable manufacturers do not give such data. Even after asking them, it's un-available with them.
Hans De Keulenaer

Low-cost Solar Thermal Plants at Heart of Algerian-German Research Push - 0 views

  • Electricity from solar thermal plants could cost as little as €0.04/kilowatt hour (kWh) [US $0.06/kWh] by 2015 to 2020, Bernhard Milow from the German Aerospace Center (DLR) said. And using solar thermal power to desalinate seawater could cost the same.
Glycon Garcia

INTERVIEW-World Bank launches new carbon guarantee product | Markets | Reuters - 0 views

  • WASHINGTON, March 17 (Reuters) - The World Bank on Monday launched a new carbon credit trading guarantee that will allow private-sector firms in developing countries to tap the growing 40 billion euro ($63.11 billion) global carbon market, a senior official said.
Glycon Garcia

New Energy Sources on Horizon | Newsweek Project Green | Newsweek.com - 0 views

  • Chances are you've heard of hybrids and biofuels, but what about oil-producing yeast and turbinelike buoys that transform ocean waves into electricity? Those are just a couple of the alternative-energy sources that may power the future according to Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund and coauthor, with Miriam Horn, of the new book "Earth: The Sequel"
Glycon Garcia

Energias Alternativas e Renováveis: São Paulo quer energia solar obrigatória ... - 0 views

  • São Paulo - Daqui a poucos meses, projetos de edificações que entrarem para aprovação na prefeitura de São Paulo terão de obedecer a lei 14.459/07, que obriga o uso de aquecimento solar.
    • Glycon Garcia
       
      In few months the new buildings in Sao Paulo should use water solar heating according to the law 14.459/07.
Hans De Keulenaer

Five Trends to Watch in the Renewable Energy Industry - 0 views

  • Growth in the renewable energy industry is set to reach more than US $250 billion by the year 2017 with the electric car, sustainable cities, non-U.S.-based energy firms, geothermal energy and the greening of the shipping industry helping to lead the way. That's the prediction made by Clean Edge in its Clean Energy Trends 2008 report released on Wednesday.
Hans De Keulenaer

EurActiv.com - EU Electricity Market Liberalisation | EU - European Information on Energy - 0 views

  • The European Commission is pushing for the liberalisation of electricity markets as part of a wider attempt to forge an EU energy policy. EurActiv takes a closer look at the liberalisation drive, including power trading and challenges specific to the electricity sector.
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    The European Commission is pushing for the liberalisation of electricity markets as part of a wider attempt to forge an EU energy policy. EurActiv takes a closer look at the liberalisation drive, including power trading and challenges specific to the electricity sector.
Hans De Keulenaer

Tackling Climate Change Achievable And Affordable · Environmental Leader · Gr... - 0 views

  • The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has released its 2008 Environmental Outlook. Without new policies, the world risks irreversibly damaging the environment and the natural resource base needed to support economic growth and well-being, according to the report. But the Outlook finds that tackling climate change, biodiversity loss, water scarcity and the health impacts of pollution is both achievable and affordable.
Hans De Keulenaer

The capacity factor of wind power « Lightbucket - 0 views

  • The capacity factor of a power plant is the ratio of the electrical energy produced in a given period of time to the electrical energy that could have been produced at continuous maximum power operation during the same period. For a conventional fossil-fuel power station, the capacity factor is determined by planned maintenance downtime, unplanned equipment failure, and by shutdowns when the station’s electricity is not needed. For wind and solar energy, power output is also determined by the availability of wind and sunlight. The maximum power output, or ‘installed capacity’, is a rather theoretical value that is rarely reached. It would be clearer to quote the mean power for solar and wind energy, but because peak power is more commonly quoted, it’s important to know the capacity factor as well, to make sense of the peak numbers.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Oil Drum: Europe | Cassandra's curse: how "The Limits to Growth" was demonized - 0 views

  • Cassandra's story is very old: she was cursed that she would always tell the truth and never be believed. But it is also a very modern story and, perhaps, the quintessential Cassandras of our age are the group of scientists who prepared and published in 1972 the book titled "The Limits to Growth". With its scenarios of civilization collapse, the book shocked the world perhaps more than Cassandra had shocked her fellow Trojan citizens when she had predicted the fall of their city to the Achaeans. Just as Cassandra was not believed, so it was for the "Limits to Growth" which, today, is still widely seen as a thoroughly flawed study, wrong all along. This opinion is based only on lies and distortions but, apparently, Cassandra's curse is still alive and well in our times.
Hans De Keulenaer

EU's 'soft power' unprepared for resource conflicts « 3E Intelligence - 0 views

  • The EU is unprepared for future conflicts over energy resources, according to a new report written for the meeting of EU leaders on 13-14 March. The report, seen by the Guardian, predicts that global warming might lead to energy wars, mass migration, failed states and political radicalisation. The report highlights the “scramble” over natural resources from the thawing Arctic region as a potential new conflict area with Russia.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Path to Zero - 0 views

  • An article in today’s Washington Post reported on new scientific research suggesting that emissions of greenhouse gases must be reduced to zero by mid-century, in order to prevent global warming that could persist for hundreds of years, perhaps eventually producing average temperatures higher than for millions of years. As the climate debate focuses increasingly on policy, the impact of such findings on efforts to craft practical frameworks for reducing US and global emissions becomes as important as the scientific result itself. The implication of the need for truly radical change contained in this latest report might either galvanize action on capping our emissions, or convince us that none of the current pathways for reducing emissions is truly worth pursuing.
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